Ryder Cup: Europeans are no longer mystery men

MEDINAH, Ill. - The question used to come up every other year when the Americans began looking ahead to the Ryder Cup. "Who's their Peter Baker?"

MEDINAH, Ill. — The question used to come up every other year when the Americans began looking ahead to the Ryder Cup. “Who’s their Peter Baker?”

Europe always had at least one player the Americans didn’t know anything about until losing to him. Baker played in only one Ryder Cup, going 3-1 in 1993 and winning a singles match against Corey Pavin, one of the toughest guys to beat in match play. Those days are gone.

As golf has expanded its borders, the Ryder Cup no longer has any mystery guests. Eight of the Europeans have joint membership on the PGA Tour, and all eight have homes in Florida. Luke Donald of England, who has the best winning percentage of anyone at Medinah, lives 45 minutes away on Chicago’s north side. There are no surprises in this Ryder Cup, only stars.

“Both teams are pretty much even and it’s going to be a close match,” European captain Jose Maria Olazabal said. “I don’t see any favorites.”

When the matches get under way today at Medinah, they will feature the two strongest teams in the 85-year history of the Ryder Cup. The entire 12-man team for the United States was part of the 30-man field at the Tour Championship last week in Atlanta, joined by five of the seven Europeans who were eligible.

For the first time, the 24 players from both sides are among the top 35 in the world ranking. Europe has four major champions and four players who have been No. 1 in the world. Three of the four rookies for the U.S. team have won majors in the past 13 months — Keegan Bradley, Bubba Watson and Webb Simpson. The Americans have experience at the top — Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Jim Furyk collectively have played in 21 Ryder Cups and 90 matches.

The Europeans have experience where it matters — winning. It all starts to unfold today before a raucous crowd in the Chicago suburbs with a Ryder Cup that has all the trappings of a heavyweight prize fight.

Olazabal fought back tears at the mention of his mentor, the late Seve Ballesteros, during the opening ceremony. And while he won’t be the same kind of captain as Ballesteros in 1997 at Valderrama, he seems to be following the same principles.

“Just play hard, play with passion and win the damn points,” Olazabal said. About the only thing missing has been fodder for the tabloids.

Familiarity in this event is breeding civility, not contempt.

“This is not a war. It’s a golf match,” U.S. captain Davis Love III said.

During the opening ceremony, both captains made a point of emphasizing friendship.

“These matches are not life and death,” Love said. “Golf has to be played with a certain spirit of graciousness or it’s not golf at all.”

It wasn’t always that way, especially when Europe began to win and then the Americans started to care. Ballesteros was the spiritual leader of those European teams, using the Ryder Cup as a chance for them to prove they were not second-class citizens to the PGA Tour. And it didn’t help when the marketing slogans promoted a contentious week, whether it was the “War on the Shore” or the “Battle at Brookline.”

By the sound of so many players, they might as well be cuddling in Chicago.

“Love Ian Poulter to death,” Watson said on Wednesday.

Most evident about this shift in the Ryder Cup was on Monday at an airport some 45 minutes away. Olazabal flew over from London with the gold Ryder Cup trophy. Only three players from his team traveled with him, because the rest already were in America.

Paul Lawrie, back after a 13-year absence in the Ryder Cup, remembers 11 players on the plane when they traveled to Boston in 1999. The exception was Jesper Parnevik, who had moved to Florida years earlier.

“I think there’s definitely less of a ‘them-and-us’ type of thing now from everybody’s point of view,” Lee Westwood said. “The players play with each other a lot more regularly since the start of the World Golf Championships, and the fact that the top world-ranked players get pulled together a lot more regularly. There’s a feeling that the crowd knows the European players a lot better.”

Has it become too friendly? The suggestion that the Ryder Cup turns soft was enough to make Poulter shudder.

“It means too much,” he said. “It means too much to Europe. It means too much to us for it to ever lose that edge.”

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